Jan 27, 2015
Drawing penalties a valuable NHL skill
If there’s an individual skill that really remains underutilized by analysts and fans right now, it’s the ability of a player to draw penalties for his respective team. TSN analytics writer Travis Yost finds the forwards who have been the best and worst at that part of the game.
By Travis Yost
If there’s an individual skill that really remains underutilized by analysts and fans right now, it’s the ability of a player to draw penalties for his respective team. While the vast majority of a hockey game is played at even-strength, there is still a swath of goals scored on special teams. Getting your team into that position, of course, has value.
Most importantly, drawing penalties has been identified as something of a repeatable talent, meaning that players who exhibit ability to consistently draw penalties will likely continue to do so. Broad Street Hockey investigated this in great detail in 2013, and concluded that drawing penalties is a “real talent that a player possesses”.
The one caveat to drawing penalties as it pertains to goal differentials (and, ultimately, adding wins to the standings) is that the inverse is also true – players who take a lot of penalties cost their team valuable goals. So, drawing penalties has value, but it’s only valuable to the extent that the player does not give those penalties back in the form of penalties against.
Let’s try and identify some of the league’s best and worst players on this front. For the sake of this article, we’ll limit our focus to the forward position for all regular skaters 2011-Present. We will pull each player’s total number of penalties drawn, and each player’s total number of penalties taken.
Here’s our top-ten, sorted by differential:
FORWARD PENALTY DIFFERENTIAL LEADERS SINCE 2011
PLAYER | TEAM | PEN. DRAWN | PEN. TAKEN | DIFFERENTIAL |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jeff Skinner | Carolina | 97 | 30 | +67 |
Dustin Brown | Los Angeles | 102 | 39 | +63 |
Nazem Kadri | Toronto | 85 | 34 | +51 |
Matt Duchene | Colorado | 57 | 12 | +45 |
Darren Helm | Detroit | 50 | 8 | +42 |
Mikkel Boedker | Arizona | 55 | 14 | +41 |
Martin St. Louis | N.Y. Rangers | 54 | 14 | +40 |
John Tavares | N.Y. Islanders | 68 | 30 | +38 |
Vladimir Tarasenko | St. Louis | 48 | 11 | +37 |
Patric Hornqvist | Pittsburgh | 55 | 18 | +37 |
Those are some massively favourable numbers, even accounting for the fact that the sample spans multiple years. But, maybe there’s a better way to capture the impact the player is having. What if we substituted penalties drawn for goals added (simply by multiplying total number of goals and power-play conversion rate, which sits at 18%), and then doing the same for goals added?
PENALTY DIFFERENTIAL AS GOAL VALUE, 2011-PRESENT
PLAYER | TEAM | EST. GOALS ADDED | EST. GOALS AGAINST | DIFFERENTIAL |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jeff Skinner | Carolina | 17.5 | 5.4 | +12.1 |
Dustin Brown | Los Angeles | 18.4 | 7.0 | +11.3 |
Nazem Kadri | Toronto | 15.3 | 6.1 | +9.2 |
Matt Duchene | Colorado | 10.3 | 2.2 | +8.1 |
Darren Helm | Detroit | 9.0 | 1.4 | +7.6 |
Mikkel Boedker | Arizona | 9.9 | 2.5 | +7.4 |
Martin St. Louis | N.Y. Rangers | 9.7 | 2.5 | +7.2 |
John Tavares | N.Y. Islanders | 12.2 | 5.4 | +6.8 |
Vladimir Tarasenko | St. Louis | 8.6 | 2.0 | +6.7 |
Patric Hornqvist | Pittsburgh | 9.9 | 3.2 | +6.7 |
You can see that Jeff Skinner and Dustin Brown (and Nazem Kadri, too) really are the cream of the crop as it pertains to drawing penalties. If you subscribe to the notion that three goals is worth a point in the standings, then they have added four points (or two wins) on just the ability to draw penalties.
Think of this alternatively: if Jeff Skinner or Dustin Brown had no measurable impact (let’s say zero points over the same timespan), they still would have added about four points in the standings from just a penalty point of view.
Let’s look at the other end of the spectrum – the forwards who have hurt their teams the most from a penalty aspect. Again, we will focus on differential as opposed to just penalties taken, as it will give us a better idea as to the larger impact on goals and wins/losses.
FORWARD PENALTY DIFFERENTIAL TRAILERS, 2011-PRESENT
PLAYER | TEAM | PENALTIES DRAWN | PENALTIES TAKEN | DIFFERENTIAL |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chris Neil | Ottawa | 40 | 85 | -45 |
Ryan Reaves | St. Louis | 28 | 66 | -38 |
Jarret Stoll | Los Angeles | 27 | 62 | -35 |
Milan Lucic | Boston | 42 | 72 | -30 |
Kyle Clifford | Los Angeles | 44 | 72 | -28 |
Matt Hendricks | Edmonton | 50 | 78 | -28 |
B.J. Crombeen | Arizona | 31 | 55 | -24 |
Todd Bertuzzi | None | 16 | 39 | -23 |
Zenon Konopka | None | 31 | 53 | -22 |
Cody McLeod | Colorado | 41 | 63 | -22 |
A lot of the league’s tough guys can be found on this list, from Chris Neil, to Ryan Reaves, to the notorious Milan Lucic. What’s important to remember is that not all ‘tough guys’ sit at the bottom of the penalty differential lists.
For example, Brandon Prust (+1) and Antoine Roussel (+2) have long played the aggressive agitator role for their respective teams. Yet, neither has hurt his club from a penalty impact. That’s largely because they have been either more effective in reducing bad penalties, or more effective in enticing the opposition to take penalties through said agitation.
How does our top group look from a goal aspect?
PENALTY DIFFERENTIAL AS GOAL VALUE, 2011-PRESENT
PLAYER | TEAM | EST. GOALS ADDED | EST. GOALS AGAINST | DIFFERENTIAL |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chris Neil | Ottawa | 7.2 | 15.3 | -8.1 |
Ryan Reaves | St. Louis | 5.0 | 11.9 | -6.9 |
Jarret Stoll | Los Angeles | 4.9 | 11.2 | -6.3 |
Milan Lucic | Boston | 7.6 | 13.0 | -5.4 |
Kyle Clifford | Los Angeles | 7.9 | 13.0 | -5.0 |
Matt Hendricks | Edmonton | 9.0 | 14.0 | -5.0 |
B.J. Crombeen | Arizona | 5.6 | 9.9 | -4.3 |
Todd Bertuzzi | None | 2.9 | 7.0 | -4.1 |
Zenon Konopka | None | 5.6 | 9.5 | -4.0 |
Cody McLeod | Colorado | 7.4 | 11.3 | -4.0 |
So, again, view this through the prism of the impact penalties – and penalties only – have had on outcomes. Chris Neil and Ryan Reaves have cost their respective teams about two to three points in the standings. This, again, is just a sliver of the player’s overall impact (whether it’s been good or bad) on his team’s performance.
From a penalty aspect, this group has had an unfavourable impact on their team’s position in the standings. Combine the penalty differentials to what we know about each player’s multi-year shot-differential and scoring-differentials, and you can get an even stronger idea about the player's impact on the game.